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HEAnet & IOS-XRHEAnet & IOS-XRFour Years & Many, Many Packets of Four Years & Many, Many Packets of
ExperienceExperienceBrian Nisbet
NOC Manager, HEAnet
A Little HistoryA Little History
• HEAnet deployed the CRS1 platform in 2007• Lots of IOS operational discussion, very little on IOS-XR• Some improvement since then, not everything• Caveats & Disclaimers:– Highlights & Lowlights– Day-to-day it all works well– Mis-use of presentation– Mixed network
HEAnet Layer3 NetworkHEAnet Layer3 Network
• ~65 Clients, Bandwidth between 10Mb – 10Gb.• All BGP, all the time.• Two routers providing core & access functions.• Layer2 connectivity to both routers, as resilient
as possible.– At least diferent vlans, preferably diferent circuits
& kit.
• IGP is still a mix of OSPF & IS-IS.
Cisco CRS-1, the HFRCisco CRS-1, the HFR
• The 8 slot is big. The 16 slot is very big indeed.• Other than its size & weight, nothing terribly
remarkable about physical installation.• Special reinforced plinth needed in the data centre.• Cabled all ports on day one back to a patch panel to
make future cabling easier.• Special power/cooling needs.
Hardware ConsiderationsHardware Considerations
• Overall, very reliable hardware.
• Three hardware failures (two linecards, one Modular Services Card (MSC)).
• Flash Card fun – more later.
• Scalable, 140Gb/slot with new linecards.– Network design, cost & compatibility of MSCs.
• MSC-A end of service/support.
• Easily impresses insurance people.
IOS-XR HistoryIOS-XR History
• Announced in 2004, first available as v2.0 only on CRS-1 – Not new anymore.
• HEAnet’s first install, December 2007 – v3.5.2• Now available for the 12000s and ASR9000.• Currently running 3.9.2, planning for 4.x– Deciding between 4.0.4 & 4.1.x
• Flash card upgrade required for move from 3.6.x– How much would you pay for a 2GB flash card?
Flashcard FunFlashcard Fun
• If that number wasn’t...– €1,419 ex VAT– Two maintenance windows– Many hours of engineer time
• ...then you haven’t been paying attention.• No actual downtime for swap.• Working without issue since installation.
IOS-XR DesignIOS-XR Design
• Every OS sucks.• Great improvement over IOS.• v4 & v6 treated largely the same.• Commit functions.• Editable lists (editor of choice).• Route Policy Language (RPL).• Sane & logical config groupings.
Dangers of Muscle MemoryDangers of Muscle Memory
• Only one way to configure. (But conf t still works!)
• Everything in sections.• Line/login details at the top.• Much more flexibility in defining user rights.– This can be a con as well as a pro.
• Access Lists and route policies before protocols
Joys of CommitmentJoys of Commitment
• ‘commit’ is normal now.– No more wondering why something hasn’t changed.
• ‘commit confirmed’ as an alternative to ‘reload in x’
• ‘commit comment’ – who did what?• ‘commit replace’ – Danger, Will Robinson!• Initial grand plans to use ‘commit comment’, but
day-to-day, it’s just ‘commit’.
RPLRPL
• Dave Wilson’s favourite thing.• No more route-maps.• Proper if/elseif and Parameters.
route-policy geant2-in if community matches-any dws-comm then set local-preference 80 elseif as-path in (ios-regex '_3300_') then set local-preference 80 elseif as-path in geant-peers then set local-preference 115 elseif community matches-any abilene-itn-comm then set local-preference 115 elseif community matches-any geanet-ixp then set local-preference 150 else set local-preference 150 endifend-policy
RPL/Config Examples (1)RPL/Config Examples (1)
• Customer routing:neighbor 193.1.xxx.xx remote-as 65XXX password encrypted XXX description DIT address-family ipv4 unicast route-policy cust-in(dit-v4, 400) in route-policy deny-all out default-originate route-policy lowmed soft-reconfiguration inbound
RPL/Config Examples (2)RPL/Config Examples (2)
• Cust-inroute-policy cust-in($pset, $pref) if destination in $pset then set local-preference $pref set community (1213:2000) endifend-policy
• Lowmedroute-policy lowmed set med 5end-policy
• $pset = list of prefixes
IGP Config ExamplesIGP Config Examples
• IGP Config all neatly arranged:router ospf red router-id 193.1.238.129 nsf cisco address-family ipv4 area 0 dead-interval 6 hello-interval 2 interface Loopback0 ! interface Loopback9 ! interface Loopback10 passive enable ! interface GigabitEthernet0/12/0/2 network point-to-point mtu-ignore enable !
ItIt’’s the Little Thingss the Little Things
• ip now needs to be specified as ipv4 or ipv6.• sh ip bgp sum -> sh bgp [ipv4|ipv6] [uni|mul] sum• ‘sh ip bgp neighbor <addr> [route|adv]’ -> sh bgp
[ipv4|ipv6] [uni|mul] neighbor <addr>[route|advertised-routes]
• Routing table now updates after config changes, even without clearing session.
• No policy = no routes exchanged (will get a warning).
Code Evolution? (1)Code Evolution? (1)
• IOS-XR is a lot further along than it was in 2008.
• Releases now are 4.0.4 & 4.1.1 (4.1.2 in Dec)
• No experience of a full version upgrade, no more choice any more.
• Messages on upgrade still very messy.
• Software Maintenance Upgrades (SMU) reducing upgrade needs, but not painless.
• CLI response seems to have improved.
Code Evolution? (2)Code Evolution? (2)
• Not *that* far along, however.• IPv6 netflow exports only available in 4.0– No ASnum for SRC or DST
• Still very buggy.– Personal favourite, adding a BGP peer could cause
the entire BGP process to reload.
• Cli still a lot slower than we’d like.• Lots of MIBs still missing, especially for v6.
Those Wonderful SMUsThose Wonderful SMUs
• SMU reality didn’t live up to the hype.• 13 SMUs out for 3.9.2.– 4 state Reload– 3 state Hitless
• hfr-base SMUs will almost always reload RP.• Situation isn’t clear & always assume
interruption.• Far preferable to upgrade.
The Future is ISSUs?The Future is ISSUs?
• In Service Software Upgrades– Available from 4.2.1 (May 2012)
• Upgrading the router with a “less than 6 second outage”.
• Promised land?• Still potentially rommon upgrades etc.
When It All Goes WrongWhen It All Goes Wrong
• Troubleshooting commands seem to vary by version.
• Show Tech is never enough.– There’s a lot of software in there.
• Hard to shake impression there are a very small number of people in Cisco who really know the code.
Older & Wiser?Older & Wiser?
• Engineers much more used to IOS-XR...• ...that doesn’t mean they like it more.• When the routers work, they just work.• SMUs or Upgrades bring fear & pain.• Hardware upgrade path isn’t straight-forward...• ...but is it ever?• If I had a time machine?– Maybe, but remember, every OS sucks.
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